airrow

joined 2 years ago
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https://www.worldbackupday.com/en

Be prepared against data loss and data theft. March 31st is the day to back up and better protect your data.

What is a backup?

A backup is a copy of all your important files — for example, your family photos, home videos, documents and emails. Instead of storing it all in one place (like your computer or smartphone), you keep a copy of everything somewhere safe.

But why should I backup?

Losing your files is way more common than you’d think.

One small accident or failure could destroy all the important stuff you care about.

See also the 3-2-1 rule: https://www.backblaze.com/blog/the-3-2-1-backup-strategy/

What Is the 3-2-1 Backup Rule?

The 3-2-1 backup rule is a simple, effective strategy for keeping your data safe. It advises that you keep three copies of your data on two different media with one copy off-site. Let’s break that down:

Three copies of your data: Your three copies include your original or production data plus two more copies.

On two different media: You should store your data on two different forms of media. ...

One copy off-site: You should keep one copy of your data off-site in a remote location, ideally more than a few miles away from your other two copies.

Their suggested setup is 1 your primary computer, 2 one external hard drive backup, and then 3 some offsite "cloud". A lot of people don't like certain "cloud" policies so you may have to find the right one. You could also drop a hard drive somewhere away from home for storage.

It's important to back data up regularly, but this "world backup day" effort is to encourage people to at least do it annually to start and to hopefully encourage getting in to the habit of regular backups.

Thoughts on backups?

 

Was anyone up to anything mathy

 

Hosted site: https://freedium.cfd/

Github: https://github.com/Freedium-cfd/web

Any other services like this? I'd like to find one for insta / facebook (because some businesses use those as their main professional websites and they're login-walled to logged out users)

 

Minecraft creator Markus "Notch" Persson says he's hoping to start work on a new game that would serve as a "spiritual successor" to the block-based sandbox game he first created in 2009.

 

I won't deny there may be some use cases, but a lot of uses seem like a search engine could get the info I'm looking for, for example:

Code generation: look for some kind of post on code needed

Definitions: look for some kind of site like dictionary.com that has definitions

So I guess my thought is to see what people are using LLMs for, and to compare with existing tools, and then maybe to copy what's being done for my own use cases.

But what are people using LLMs for currently (that you think can't be served by other tools)?

 

Unconventional computing is computing by a wide range of new or unusual methods [including] ... optical computing, quantum computing, chemical computing, natural computing, biologically-inspired computing, wetware computing, DNA computing, molecular computing, amorphous computing, nanocomputing, reversible computing, ternary computing, fluidics, analogue computing, human and domino computation.

I'd still like a mechanical computer, I guess they have been testing some new designs out: https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/cpus/kirigami-mechanical-computer-has-high-density-memory-and-doesnt-need-electricity-researchers-demo-new-mechanical-computing-design

Domino and billiard ball computers sound like interesting "just for fun" designs:

https://infogalactic.com/info/Billiard_ball_computer

https://infogalactic.com/info/Domino_computer

 

Play in browser: https://basicallydan.github.io/skifree.js/

source (language warning): https://github.com/basicallydan/skifree.js/

some backstory: https://ski.ihoc.net/

September 17, 2024: SkiFree 2 is in development!

lol

 

GUI = Graphical User Interface, CLI = Command Line Interface (or TUI = Text User Interface)

It was occurring to me that it might be easier to manually use a mouse to click certain buttons to execute commands rather than type them up so I was wondering when people like to use GUIs versus CLIs?

(A lot of programmers seem to promote CLI over GUI for everything, because it can use less computer resources I think, but it may require more thinking or effort than just clicking a button than typing things up sometimes, I was thinking)

 

https://lichess.org/

https://infogalactic.com/info/Shogi

Shogi (将棋 shōgi?) (/ˈʃoʊɡiː/, Japanese: [ɕo̞ːɡi] or [ɕo̞ːŋi]), also known as Japanese chess or the Generals' Game, is a two-player strategy board game in the same family as Western (international) chess, chaturanga, makruk, shatranj and xiangqi, and is the most popular of a family of chess variants native to Japan.

 

Advent of Code is an Advent calendar of small programming puzzles for a variety of skill levels that can be solved in any programming language you like. People use them as interview prep, company training, university coursework, practice problems, a speed contest, or to challenge each other.

You don't need a computer science background to participate - just a little programming knowledge and some problem solving skills will get you pretty far. Nor do you need a fancy computer; every problem has a solution that completes in at most 15 seconds on ten-year-old hardware.

 

This is an operating system [in the public domain], with a user interface as simple as MSDOS

 

The Department of Justice says that Google must divest the Chrome web browser to restore competition to the online search market, and it left the door open to requiring the company to spin out Android, too.

Haven't been following this drama, this doesn't sound fair to Google (not that I care or like the company) as there are other search engines and browsers and mobile operating systems.

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